Showing posts with label Sapporo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sapporo. Show all posts

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Japan: Week 7

This site is no longer going to be updated. I have upgraded my site and the new location is:
http://worldgallivant.com
  1. Sapporo to Wakkanai to Sapporo
  2. Sapporo to Okayama
  3. Okayama to Takamatsu to Imabari to Onomichi to Tokyo
  4. Mitaka: Studio Ghibli Museum
  5. Emperor's Garden, Tskiji Market, Sailor Moon, & Capsule Hotel
  6. Kimi Ryokan
  7. Tokyo Shopping and Flight to Seattle
Here is a map of the route we took and the exact places. Wow did we make it far during our first week. We were traveling at the speed of a Shinkansen (Japanese bullet train)! Sadly Google Map doesn't allow you to have all those points while in public transportation mode, but we did travel the entire way on JR train.



Cape Soya, Wakkanai
Most Northern point
of Mainland Japan
We went from Akita to Wakkanai. Ever sense I had seen a Japanese animation I had wanted to visit the most northern point of Japan. Wakkanai has an actual monument about an hour outside of the city that marks the most northern point. Ending our main travel by going from the south to the north was mindboggling to say the least.

To round out our large Island hopping we visited the last of the four main islands, Shikoku. We travelled over the only bridge that connects the main island of Honshu with that of Shikoku by train. The ride was even on a sleeper train, which we really wanted to experience if only to ride on, and we were just in luck, we each had our own bunk! We originally planned to bike across the Shimanami Kaido which is a bike/pedestrian bridge that goes from Imabari to Onomichi. We ended up instead traveling the same route by bus, as we were a little short on time. At the transfer site we found an amazing vending machine that basically materialized a fabulous banana icee for 200¥ or about 2 USD.







All the girls going shopping

Goodbye Japan! Hello Space Needle
and Seattle
After this final travel adventure, we headed back to Tokyo for a stay at a capsule hotel and some souvenir shopping before heading to the airport. After leaving the capsule hotel we saw all these Tokyo-ites with their suitcases. It had become a regular site to see many people walking around with suitcases. It helps them when shopping as they are easier to manage when getting on and off trains while also going up and down stairs or escalators which are everywhere around Tokyo and most of Japan. After some last moment shopping around Tokyo we headed to Narita Airport and eventually lift off. Our last official photo for our first excursion overseas was a photo of downtown Seattle and the Space Needle Seattle. Coming home was a lot different since we saw everything in a different light, and a new perspective.  The way only traveling gets you to question and experience new things and allows you to make new assessments about your own Country, State, City, and life choices!

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Japan: Week 6

This site is no longer going to be updated. I have upgraded my site and the new location is:
http://worldgallivant.com
  1. Wajima, Senmaida to Niigata
  2. Matsumoto: Fireflies
  3. Nagano: Monkeys
  4. Matsumoto to Niigata
  5. Niigata (Sea of Japan) & Hagurosan
  6. Hagurosan to Akita
  7. Akita to Sapporo
Here is a map of the route we took and the exact places. Wow did we make it far during our first week. We were traveling at the speed of a Shinkansen (Japanese bullet train)! Sadly Google Map doesn't allow you to have all those points while in public transportation mode, but we did travel the entire way on JR train.



Senmaida about an hour bus ride
from Wajima
Tree hugger in Kanazawa
From Kanazawa, we headed to Senmaida also known as a thousand rice fields flowing into the Sea of Japan. We took a whole day traveling to Wajima, a large city located by Senmaida, so that we could take the earliest bus to the rice fields the next morning. We were very happy to have finally made it to famed fields. They were miraculous and that they were by the Sea of Japan was fantastic, we could not have asked for more.

We headed back to Kanazawa, and then on to Niigata, were we found some amazing tree huggers. From there we headed on to Nagano and Matsumoto. After speaking with the information center in Matsumoto we found out that there was a local park that hosts firefly festivals. The park was a large mash area with a slow moving stream zig-zagging throughout. Circling the park was a nice paved or boarded walk where you could stroll to view the different areas and groups of fireflies. As the night continued on, it appeared that the fireflies became more and more tired. Tired enough for us to catch a couple and inspect them a little closer. I had only seen one in my life, on the east coast, but it was from a distance, while Val had never seen one. To be standing in a park that we only paid 300¥ each to enter and be surrounded by hundreds to thousands of these magnificent creates was dream-like.


In an area by Nagano, Jigokundani Onsen, they have monkeys that regularly bathe in the hot springs. Oh, we enjoyed taking photo after photo of them.

A new baby that was
watching the old folks
play nearby

Val and the monkeys
Just chillin' by the onsen
We wanted to head back to Niigata so that we could dip our toes into the Sea of Japan. Val got only her toes wet, while I got swallowed by the Sea. This long cement pier was a blast of fun, standing on the sea jacks, playing in the water, and greeting the gentlemen that were surveying the structure and watching what the fisherman were catching. What better way to enjoy the morning then by experiencing the little, everyday things.
Niigata and the Sea of Japan

Akita train station
Train stations had become a part of our everyday lives in the last couple of weeks. Akita was one of these stations that we spent a little time in on our way to the next place. They say: it’s not the destination but the journey that matters, or something to that affect. We were enjoying both: the destination and the journey.  

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Urban Camping

This site is no longer going to be updated. I have upgraded my site and the new location is:
http://worldgallivant.com

We read a lot about urban camping in Japan, before ever going over there and doing it ourselves. The main thing that made me feel confident about it being safe was that my mother had approved of it and even found it herself AND that on one of the recommendations it had said a police officer had suggested the park first.
Beppu, Beppu Park
Along the way we had asked many tourist centers if there was a place to camp at _____ (fill in the blank), they all would reply that they cannot officially recommend it, but that many people do camp there.

We would of loved to have more ideas of places to stay or that would be good. As we became experienced Japan Urban Campers, three criteria had to be met:
  1. A bathroom
  2. Two solid, old trees
  3. Those trees had to be at a distance of 13 to 16 feet apart (Mother's feet, heel to toe)

Here are a few of the places that we stayed at all around Japan. The only one that we wouldn't recommend is Himeji Castle Park as the security guards didn't really like it, but if pressed to find a place late at night in Himeji we would go back and know that we would have to take it all down before 5 am.

A few of the places we would really recommend/ our favorites:
  • Yokohama, Seaside Park: beautiful and a nice way to see the city lights and close to a bathroom
  • Shirahama, Shirarahama Beach: we never had to take the hammock and Nube down during our 2.5 day stay, as almost no one walks behind the storage containers placed up by the cement walkway (this was during the weekdays, not sure how that would change during the weekend and high travel season). Very close to a nice bathroom. Beautiful beach.
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